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10 April 2011 | 42 replies
After that everything is gravy.The "investment of the self with a large fiscal component" is certainly worthwhile, IMO, if in addition to the extra one earns over their lifetime with a degree, they come out as a better, more well-rounded individual.Within my various sample populations/circles of friends/colleagues/acquaintances, all of the ones that went to college are doing a lot better in life than those that didn't, and it's not even close.
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15 June 2023 | 48 replies
Brokers want you to sweat and earn so they can make passive income from each transaction.
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14 May 2018 | 108 replies
Also depending on the interest rate on your car, you might consider paying that off instead of RE crowdfunding P2P lending or ETFs because it will lower your debt to income ratio thus allowing you to borrow more for a property in the future and/ or the interest saved could be more than the return earned on other investments (depending on the interest rate) and it is essentially a guaranteed return.
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28 March 2012 | 14 replies
For me, while appreciation eats away at the future earnings, i'd need to actively work in order to not only make up the gap i lost in the extra taxation, but, i'd also need to beat inflation in order for it to make sense.
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5 May 2018 | 53 replies
No matter what you do, you'll be better off earning a dollar instead of paying one for something you can do.
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25 July 2020 | 31 replies
They retire at 50 with 90% of their paycheck, then move to a different job earning double salary.
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30 November 2017 | 9 replies
In the midst of this, I earned my real estate license and now am an active real estate agent which I am super excited about!
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28 December 2016 | 18 replies
They do not leave that equity sitting in the property earning them a 0 return.I would not pay down that loan even if you paid it down and no you were cash flow positive but what is your return on equity?
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21 April 2016 | 6 replies
Here is the offer to the investors:From the day the property is purchased investors will earn 10% on their investment plus 1/12 of the net profit for each $25,000.00 invested.
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20 February 2020 | 16 replies
That is understandable as it is how they earn more money.